snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hello Boundlings! Letās play a quick game that relies entirely on your phoneās predictive text š
Use your predictive text to finish the following sentences:
Hereās mine! ā¬ļøš
I want to read a book about the history of the universe but Iām afraid to ask the questions of the world because Iām too lazy.
I gave this book five stars because it was my first time seeing a book about the past two decades and it was so interesting.
The main character is a very cool guy who has been around since the beginning of time but he was very much in love with the idea of being a star.
Post from the The Debtor's Game forum
I'm finding it very hard to take this book seriously with all the uses of "male" and "female" to refer to people. The first time threw me off, but I thought I could get used to it, but they're used so often, it's really hard to ignore or even tolerate.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I feel like this is dumb, but I know a lot of other people feel the same way. I have a long tbr and sometimes I panic a little at the length. Like it's a to-do list. But it's NOT a to-do list. How do you keep yourself from treating your tbr like a to-do list? Any tips?
snowseau started reading...

The Debtor's Game
Isabelle Mongeau
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hi everyone!
So, I'd like to know your thoughts/impressions about Australian literature. Whether you're from another country, or grew up down under, do you engage with Australian literature? If so, what texts? What are your impressions of it?
It's something I'm quite curious about. A common experience in aus is that people study it in high school for a bit and never look back. On the other hand, some people love it - they follow prizes like the Stella and Miles Franklin, attend local writers festivals, etc. I personally try to read at least a couple of Australian texts each year because we do have some truly great writing.
But I'd also like to know whether people read it much overseas. I get the impression that Australian literature only really circulates locally and does not often take the international stage. For example, I barely hear book influencers talking about Australian literature.
What are your thoughts?
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Its been on my mind what king of reader I am, so started thinking of how to describe it and compare it to others.
So I started thinking of reading personalities as a 3-part combo:
Reader Style + Reader Motivation + Reader Behavior
Pick one from each category and combine them to describe your reading personality.
1ļøā£ Reader Style: How you process books
Analytical Reader: You break books down into partsācharacters, themes, prose, pacingāand enjoy understanding why something worked or didnāt.
Emotional Reader: Your main connection to books is how they make you feel. If a book hits emotionally, youāll forgive a lot of flaws.
Immersive Reader: You read to disappear into another world. Atmosphere and worldbuilding matter more than analysis.
Fast Flow Reader: You read primarily for story momentum. Plot and pacing matter more than prose or themes.
Reflective Reader: You love books that make you think about life, philosophy, or meaning.
2ļøā£ Reader Motivation: How you choose books
Vibe Reader: You pick books based on tone, atmosphere, or aesthetic.
Mood Reader: You read whatever fits your current mood.
Genre Reader: You stick closely to specific genres you love.
Trope Reader: You actively look for specific tropes or relationship dynamics.
Author Reader: You follow specific authors and read everything they write.
Recommendation Reader: Your TBR mostly comes from friends, reviewers, or the community.
3ļøā£ Reader Behavior: How you interact with reading
Curator Reader: You organize reading like a collection or archive (lists, spreadsheets, vibe maps, reading challenges).
Explorer Reader: You actively seek out new genres, formats, and unusual books.
Comforter Reader: You often return to favorite genres or reread beloved books.
Completist Reader: You love finishing series, author backlists, or themed reading goals.
I think I am a Analytical Vibe Curator reader because I tend to pick books based on aesthetic and atmosphere, then over-analyze them afterward and categorize them into elaborate systems.
snowseau commented on snowseau's update
snowseau is interested in reading...

Spinning Silver
Naomi Novik
snowseau is interested in reading...

Ella Enchanted (Ella Enchanted, #1)
Gail Carson Levine
snowseau is interested in reading...

Spinning Silver
Naomi Novik
snowseau wrote a review...
This was such a nice story of love, grief, and acceptance. It's such a good retelling of Beauty and the Beast not just for the story, but also because you see glimpses of both Belle and the Beast in both Lyssa and Alderic.
snowseau finished a book

Kill the Beast
Serra Swift
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Iāve stumbled across first person POV used in synopses maybe twice? So I think this might be a newer trend but correct me if Iām wrong!
My observation that this is more common with romance (sub)genres, which then also makes this discussion at least a little related to this very recent one about the [Slate article on POV](https://pagebound.co/posts/304662 https://pagebound.co/posts/304662).
What do you think about this phenomenon? Is it new or am I that forgetful? What books do it well and what donāt? Is it better than simply not having a synopsis at the back of a book? How does it differ from having an first person POV excerpt?
Iām⦠not a fan. To me, the job of a synopsis is to give you context in a controlled way. The ones Iāve seen do achieve that, yes. But I think they plunge you too fast into the main characterās headspace. As readers, weāre used to putting ourselves in the shoes of the characters we meet. When I read those synopses, I feel like Iām being thrown into a situation I donāt want to be in without any idea what to expect. Not even the genre. But perhaps I am also biased as I do not tend to go for romance books. But I do wonder if it can be done well and catch my interest if the genre/story is right.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hello everyone, I'm looking for cute covers for the Kobo Libra Colour. I currently have the clear plastic case, and I want something else to protect the front. I've been seeing people use their Hobonichi covers with their Kobo. I don't know where to look, haha.
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Drop a quote from your favorite book that would convince me or others to read it. No need for explanation and context (unless someone asks). Make it spoiler free please š«¶š»
I thought this would be fun. I love annotating beautiful prose and saving quotes from books so I would love to see some memorable ones from you guys and maybe get some recommendations out of it too! Why not add more to our growing TBR š
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I'm cleaning off my nightstand because I need to use it as a photo backdrop for something and so it's requiring me to touch alllll the books I've piled on there, which have been so patiently waiting their turn. I thought it would be interesting to see what other people have on their nightstands ā do you treat it as a "next up" or a collection of your favorites or something else? Do you keep a lot of books there, or just a few? Or one?! (Or none?!) I'll post mine in the comments!
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Are you kinder to indie authors? More willing to rate debuts higher? Less understanding when it comes to errors in traditionally published books?
Over the last year, Iāve heard a lot of arguments for and against treating certain releases differently, and I was wondering where other people fell on the topic.
Personally, I try to review everything the same way -- at the end of the day, if Iām paying for a book, Iām entitled to an opinion on it, regardless of how it was published and who wrote it, right? But, on the other hand, there is a part of me that somehow feels like I need to be more... positive, I guess, when it comes to debuts and indies? So, rather than feeling comfortable saying I just didnāt enjoy something, I find myself wanting to sugarcoat it when I say anything negative (even though reviews are for readers and I donāt even want authors reading my reviews).
So, yeah, how do you review different releases? Do you think itās fair to have different standards between trad and indie publishing, or debuts and established authors? Do you think there should be a difference in how we review things?
snowseau entered a giveaway...
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
I am sick, so I made this! Some of these are supposed to be hard, some are genuinely only about preference. All lighthearted of course, donāt take them TOO seriously (unless it would be funny to do so)
Feel free to elaborate on some or all (or not at all) on why you chose the way you did & to add other tricky questions in the comments, Iām curious to see what pagebound thinks š«¶
snowseau commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
Hello all !! I was in a local bookshop today and found the gem of a lifetime ! A book named after me !!! Now for some people, this is old news. But for my BIPOC friends out there ⦠the struggle is real. So imagine my surprise when I look over the vintage classics & see Ayesha, The Return of She by H. Rider Haggard; a 1905 gothic-fantasy novel ?!? I couldnāt believe my eyes !! And then it got me wondering⦠there are thousands of books on this planet, could there be one for you too ??
SO: do you have a namesake book? Have you read it/would you read it? Is it out there but you havenāt discovered it yet?